Top VR Highlights: incl. ‘Anne Frank House VR’

Today I’ve tried out 2 new apps on the Oculus Store: Looking Glass and Anne Frank House VR.

Looking Glass VR is very simple, but it’s pretty cool: you’re at an old desk, having selected a period of human history. What’s striking is the way the old photos appear so vividly from out of history through the ‘looking glass’ before you. This is due to the ‘stereographic cards’ created by the first 3D viewer in 1838, now available in VR. So it’s basically a pure example of new technology giving new life to old.

But while using this app I found myself actually reading and ‘studying’ history in this ‘antique’ context, in a way that our modern surroundings just don’t allow, with all our many distractions. It made me think – for the first time – that a Virtual Desktop could be very useful ‘quiet space’ for working, and I notice there’s now a new app with this title, that might be worth checking out.

Anne Frank House VRmeanwhile is a comprehensive experience from World War 2, without any soldiers or fighting, but based around that famous diary. Maybe the best thing, if you’ve not already heard of Anne Frank, is to read about her here on Everipedia. This may spark more interest in experiencing this app, from top developers Force Field.

I just love the way VR has this power to illustrate so fully important stories from history with such presence, without even the need to visit the actual house in Amsterdam. In fact, here we’re given two options: Story Mode and Tour Mode. The creaky floorboard sounds and noise of the planes overhead increase the mood, but it’s Anne’s words and the deserted nature of the ‘secret annex’ in the house that will move you.